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  1. chills. headaches. diarrhea. muscle aches. joint pain. dry cough. progressive weakness. People can also catch pneumonia and develop chest pain, bloody sputum and can have trouble breathing and even sometimes stop breathing. Other symptoms of tularemia depend on how a person was exposed to the tularemia bacteria.

  2. 9 de abr. de 2024 · Tularemia is an illness caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis. It’s also known as rabbit fever. Tularemia spreads through contact with animals that have the bacteria. Wild animals—such as hares, rabbits, squirrels, muskrats, beavers, and deer—can have tularemia. Large numbers of rabbits, hares, or rodents can die during outbreaks.

  3. Tularemia (rabbit fever), caused by F. tularensis, is a disease affecting a broad range of mammalian species including human and nonhuman primates.The agent is distributed throughout the temporate Northern Hemisphere and is endemic in parts of North America, Europe, and Asia (Thomas and Schaffner, 2010).Carried by rabbits and rodents, it is therefore most often reported in outdoor-housed ...

  4. Tularemia (also known as rabbit fever) is caused by oval-shaped bacteria (coccobacilli) called Francisella tularensis. F. tularensis is transmitted to humans by the bite of infected ticks, deer flies, contact with infected animals or infected carcasses, inhalation of air-borne bacteria, and ingestion of infected food or water.

  5. 13 de sept. de 2022 · Fever is a defense mechanism against threatening health factors, especially infections, in which the body raises its temperature to make reproduction more difficult for pathogens. The most common infections in rabbits that can cause fever are: Viral hemorrhagic disease: viral hemorrhagic disease is caused by a calicivirus.Although the incubation period is up to three days, animals may die ...

  6. 3 de dic. de 2015 · Rabbit Fever on the Rise in the US, CDC Says. News. By Jeanna Bryner. published 3 December 2015. The bacteria that cause tularemia, also called rabbit fever, can infect rabbits as well as humans.

  7. Symptoms can include fever, sores, and swollen lymph nodes. Cultures of tissue samples or blood help doctors make the diagnosis. Injections of antibiotics are almost always effective. Preventing tick bites, handling carcasses carefully, and disinfecting water can reduce the risk of tularemia. (See also Overview of Bacteria.) Transmission